Longfellow and Liberty

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow died on March 24 in 1882 in Cambridge, Massachusetts.  The following poem conveys his love and respect for his country as well as his confidence in its Godly foundation and the hope it offers to the world.  Let us join his prayer for our great land.

O Ship of State

Thou, too, sail on, O Ship of State!
Sail on, O Union, strong and great!
Humanity with all its fears,
With all the hopes of future years,
Is hanging breathless on thy fate!
We know what Master laid thy keel,
What Workmen wrought thy ribs of steel,
Who made each mast, and sail, and rope,
What anvils rang, what hammers beat,
In what a forge and what a heat
Were shaped the anchors of thy hope!
Fear not each sudden sound and shock,
‘Tis of the wave and not the rock;
‘Tis but the flapping of the sail,
And not a rent made by the gale!
In spite of rock and tempest’s roar,
In spite of false lights on the shore,
Sail on, nor fear to breast the sea!
Our hearts, our hopes, are all with thee.
Our hearts, our hopes, our prayers, our tears,
Our faith triumphant o’er our fears,
Are all with thee, -are all with thee!

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

Turkish Delight and other terrible things for which we trade our souls.

Turkish Delight and other terrible things for which we trade our souls.

In the Christian classic and movie The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, Edmund is so obsessed with his favorite treat, Turkish Delight, and so angry at the world for his mistreatment that he betrays those he really loves.

Perhaps the most tempting and deadly of all these sumptuous treats is the idea that we are special, that the world revolves around us.  This misconception doesn’t rob from us all forms of compassion or selflessness, but it does cause us to put ourselves in a special place that can only be granted to us by others.  This aura of specialness that we surround ourselves with produces a creeping selfishness that infects the way we see the world and relate to one another and if left unchecked will erode our love for others as we sink into a deepening maelstrom of self-infatuation.  The good things within us, our humanity, derive from our closeness to the Lord, not our absorption in self.

Jesus is our example of selfless living.  He said he came not to be served, but to serve others (Mt 20:28).  He also told us that our leaders should be those who serve the rest (Mt 20:27).  There are scores of other references to Jesus and the apostles that deal with love and selfless giving.  We are commanded to love one another, serve one another and put others before ourselves.  We are told to discipline our speech so that it builds up others in their faith in Christ.  We are also reminded not to eat or drink to purposefully offend someone weaker, nor flaunt our religious practices.  On the other side, we are not to expect others to meet our standard of diet and religious piety, but to let the Lord direct them as we labor to restore while maintaining a sense of self-distrust and humility.

As we approach Easter, you can change the atmosphere in your home, job, class and wherever you find yourself, if you will see where you are as a place to serve.  The sweet-tasting candy called “me” will destroy us as sure as poison.   The antidote is to be like Jesus.

 

Myths and Manipulations: Jesus was a Wimp!

Myths and Manipulations

Every once in a while my head gets clogged up with things and I have to clear them out so I can move on. I believe the things I’m going to tell you are errors.  They are either passed on in ignorance or deliberately used to manipulate people. Let’s look at a few of these myths.

Jesus was a wimp.  He was not!  Most of the pictures show Jesus with deer eyes and soft hands.  I don’t think so.  In His livelihood He was a builder, probably a stone cutter or mason, not a carpenter.  His hands were calloused.  He was physical enough to chase the crooks from the temple with a whip made of cords.  He used violence when He did that and turned over their tables.  He was a man’s man.  He had enough courage to look a man in the eyes and ask him to give up his most important possessions.  He was humble but he was no sissy.  Real men like fishermen could relate to Him.  Real men still can!

Self-defense is prohibited in the New Testament.  Sorry, but it is not.  Loving your neighbor does not mean you have to let him take your life, life that God alone can give.  Revenge is forbidden; so is striking out to protect your pride.  That’s what “turning the other cheek” is about.  You can choose not to defend yourself, which will be between you and Him alone, His will for you, not necessarily for me or anyone else.  If you are just cowardly and want to believe nothing can happen if you don’t think it, be that on your own head.  But don’t call someone else to do what you lack the physical and moral will to do yourself.  Want to read more?  Check this out:  http://davekopel.org/Religion.htm or contact me for a list of resources.

Churches should listen to the un-churched.  Myth!  We have had too many polls where people who don’t know Jesus from Derek Jeter are telling us what they don’t like about the church.  C’mon, let’s think for just a minute.  Believers are supposed to have a relationship with God, and the Holy Spirit is supposed to live within them and guide them.  I believe this is true in spite of the problems the church has.  So, why not ask Him what His church is supposed to be like.  Pastors, really all believers, are supposed to read the Bible, God’s Word, and get direction there.  Maybe the reason the church has some of the troubles I mentioned above is because we have made it a haven for folks with no relationship with God and who give no priority to His Word.

Thanks, I feel better!

Porcupines and the Tower of Babel

Question: How do broken, sinful people govern themselves?

Answer: The way porcupines make love, very carefully.

Political commentators have used bales of print and bushels of words since the election last month to convince us that what we really want is for everyone in Washington to get along. I couldn’t disagree more, and I believe the founders of this land shared my opinion.

The founding fathers knew what an unbridled ruling elite could do to personal liberty because they experienced it and rejected it. Their experience caused them to design a system where power was never to be concentrated in the hands of an agreeable few. They (founders) knew that man was fallen and prone to selfishness, so they proposed to use the conflicting self-interest of elected officials and ordinary citizens as a system of checks and balances.

Our system of government pits state against state and the combined states against the federal government. The federal government itself has conflicting powers, the Congress against the Senate and the president against both, with the Supreme Court acting as referee and using the Constitution as a rule book to keep each in line. In each of these powers there are financial interests, issues of ambition and power, as well as regional preference and a multitude of political complexities that stand in the way of “getting things done” and bi-partisanship. Each in the pursuit of his own goal would run into some conflicting goal of another, and the resulting standoff would result in lack of action. Doing nothing is ok; it is the way it is supposed to be. In those rare situations like invasion or some other incident that affects a large portion of the population, there would be agreement on a common solution driven by the several interests involved.

The Tower of Babel illustrates the power of sinful man to rebel against God and do as he pleases. The system of regional self-interest as a curb to man’s godless ambition that our founders used was first used by God. The New Testament tells us to avoid legal agreement with unrighteousness. I’m praying for godly gridlock.

Putting Principles into Practice

How big is our Christianity?

As citizens of the United States, one of the greatest obligations we have is to vote.  We get to participate in the process of government by choosing those who will make decisions for us for the next few years.  Christians have even a higher obligation, not to government or to fellow citizens, but to God, to express in their vote the principles of Christianity.

Recent published surveys have detailed an appalling lack of biblical knowledge among church attendees.  Maybe we no longer know what principles we are to judge candidates by?  Perhaps we can no longer form an opinion based on biblical truth about taxes, property, crime, and the role of government?  The Founders feared such a time would come, so they encouraged Bible reading and lessons and involvement in church and religion.  They knew that without a virtuous people there would be no virtuous leaders and without virtuous leaders the country they started would fail from within.

As Christians we must be involved in the political process, and we must vote for those who will uphold and further biblical principles.  Moses was told to select able men who feared God as rulers: Exodus 18:21 Moreover thou shalt provide out of all the people able men, such as fear God, men of truth, hating covetousness; and place such over them, to be rulers of thousands, and rulers of hundreds, rulers of fifties, and rulers of tens:  This is wise counsel for us also and who can argue that it is not God’s will.  God has given us guidelines for whom to choose and how to judge who is best for any particular office.

This poem from an earlier era has often been my prayer.

GOD, give us men! A time like this demands
Strong minds, great hearts, true faith and ready hands;
Men whom the lust of office does not kill;
Men whom the spoils of office cannot buy;
Men who possess opinions and a will;
Men who have honor; men who will not lie;
Men who can stand before a demagogue
And damn his treacherous flatteries without winking!
Tall men, sun-crowned, who live above the fog
In public duty, and in private thinking;
For while the rabble, with their thumb-worn creeds,
Their large professions and their little deeds,
Mingle in selfish strife, lo! Freedom weeps,
Wrong rules the land and waiting Justice sleeps.
Josiah Gilbert Holland

Marines, Multitudes and Missing the Point!

I don’t have HBO.

If I did, I would have watched the recent mini-series called “The Pacific”.  The series was based on the experiences of three soldiers in the Pacific theater during WWII.  I recently finished reading two of the three books the series was based upon.  There was no emphasis on grand and broad strategy (except to complain) or even on small unit infantry tactics.  These were the experiences of individual soldiers living and fighting in the weary muck and gore of the Pacific Islands.

The armed forces are made up of individuals.

Let’s think about the place of the individual.  What do you think?  Did Jesus come to save the world (all the people all at once) or the individuals that over the generations have made up that world?  Ponder it, please; it may change the way you think about yourself and your relationship with the Lord.

Did Jesus speak to multitudes or to the individuals within that multitude?  Did Apostles like Peter and Paul write to individual believers in some specific location or to a homogeneous mass of humanity?  Remember, they mentioned individual people by name in many of their letters.

Does the Lord expect you to relate to Him on an individual level?  Relate means relationship, doesn’t it?  Do we have an individual or personal relationship with the Savior?  Are we personally and individually responsible for our attitudes and actions, or do we function only on the level of a village?  (No idiot jokes here because that would imply individual behavior unless the whole village was idiots, then who could tell.)

Jesus loves individuals.  He died for all the individuals, you and me and everyone else, but as individuals.  You do not have to be in a meeting of other Jesus lovers to relate to Him.  You can love, serve and worship Him right where you are, even alone.  The meeting is good, but the real church does not cease to function or exist until it gathers. The church doesn’t mystically appear as it funnels into some lifeless steel and stick structure. The church is, always, through you and me as we live in Him.

As soon as it comes out, I’m getting the DVDs.

The Cheapskate is Awakened by the Destroyed and Desperate!

I just finished an inspiring book.  The book is Lone Survivor by Marcus Luttrell.  Luttrell tells the story of his four- man SEAL team and their mission to capture or kill a Taliban leader near the Pakistani border in Afghanistan.  Their mission goes terribly wrong and soon Luttrell is the only SEAL alive, and he is wounded and fighting for his life in the dangerous terrain of killers and goats.

The book is filled with examples of courage, commitment, sacrifice and the inexpressible brotherhood of warriors.  Luttrell pulls no punches as he deals with the rigors of SEAL training and the incredibly high wash-out rate.  The tough training highlights the inner strength of those who press forward and graduate.  Later he tells us about the courage of his wounded teammates fighting against impossible odds, their love for one another and their commitment to their country.  His teammates weren’t the only courageous people in the mountains.  We learn from Luttrell about the honor and bravery of a mountain village that take him in and shelter him from the Taliban, and we experience the hate of those who killed his friends and who would kill us all if given the chance.

There were times as I read that I found myself angry, then shamed by the honor and love of those selfless heroes, American and Pashtun.  I also found myself inspired and encouraged by honorable and courageous humanity.  I was being challenged as I read and I like that. Then it happened.

You see, I can be a cheapskate.  In fact I bought this book at a used store for half price.  I fanned through it before I bought it to be sure it was whole and not so marked up that it would distract my reading.  It was good and I got a bargain.  But as I read almost to the end of the book, I found a partial sentence underlined in pen. The underlined passage had to do with a conjecture that good things always have a bad side.  As I read I slipped from the world of heroes and fell into the pit of misery that must have been the home of the previous owner.  I wondered who could read such a story, go past all the heroism and sacrifice and zero in on one partial sentence of fatalistic and negative philosophy.  What was this poor person like?  How did they survive in the world?  Did every sunrise remind them of dusk?  Were they like some vulture who flew over the most beautiful rolling green landscape looking for some rotting death under a bush?

In the SEALS and Pashtun, I found courage and faith; in the Taliban I saw blinding hatred; in the previous reader, I discovered entrenched and toxic despair.  How tragic.  Regardless of our circumstances, all things still work together for good to those who love Him.  We are not as those who are without hope!

Warning: Lone Survivor is an adult book with graphic violence and language.  Remember, I told you so!

Partial Thinks!

Whenever I get the ill-conceived idea to work on my house or car, I always find other things, beside the original task, that need done.  A fifteen-minute job can take a day.  I end up doing all sorts of unplanned and unprepared -for jobs.  I’ve learned to write down the original task so I don’t forget it during the marathon.  Better yet, I remember the potential for job expansion and conclude I don’t have enough time which gives me a reason to put it off.

I have the same problem when I think about things. (I try to think about something at least once a month.)  So in this installment you are receiving all the little things I thought about that were not related to my monthly think.  They are incomplete because I ran out of think time.

Why does everyone deserve everything? I saw on TV that I deserve to be safe, a good night’s sleep, and mobility.  If I deserve it, why do I have to buy something, spend money to get it?  It seems that folks are eager to believe they are deserving.  This got me to thinking about what I really deserve.  I didn’t like what I came up with.  The Bible says the wages of sin are death.  Those of us who believe the Bible rarely press to get what we deserve.  Really, I have it pretty good.  My home, family, ministry, and community are all probably better than I deserve.  I hope they don’t figure it out and start demanding what they deserve.

Are we chasing our spiritual tail? I saw an announcement for a Christian group recently that indicated that with their help we could have freedom from our struggles with anger, control issues, anxiety, and perfectionism.  Perfectionism?  Isn’t that what this is all about?  I believe the Lord wants to work within us to make us like Him.  We must beware though, lest we become spiritual hypochondriacs.  Let’s ask the Lord for a good dose of common sense.

Who’s ready to die? I have a picture on my computer desktop of British troops on D-Day, lying on their bellies on the beach while their officer stands over them.  Why was he standing? Thoughtful consideration of the soldiers’ situation reveals, as do their own words, that when they gave up the idea of trying to survive, they became effective warriors and leaders.  In their minds, the only goal was to do the job they were there to do and perhaps save their companions.  We need more Christians who have given up the thought of life for the goal of pleasing the one who has placed us here.

No Greater Love and the Culture of Selfishness

Years ago Rudyard Kipling wrote, “If you can keep your head when all about you are losing theirs and blaming it on you…” We live in a tumultuous time made worse by the cultural approval of a sense of selfish entitlement.  It seems that everyone feels they are owed something but no one (or very few) wants to be responsible for themselves.

Next week has been set aside as National Police Week.  As next week ends, special memorial services will be held in Washington and around the country to honor those who have given their lives during 2009 in service to their communities.  Since 1962, May 15 has been designated as National Law Enforcement Memorial Day.  Thousands will gather to remember those who gave the ultimate sacrifice to keep peace in their communities and to protect their fellow officers and the innocent.

As I write this, the Officer Down Memorial Page (www.odmp.org) reports that line-of-duty deaths are up over 20% from this time last year when the total was 126.  Traffic accidents are always a significant contributor to officer deaths, and the last few months are no different.  What is different is that recently officers have been targeted for attack and ambushed, and the main reason is that they were wearing a law enforcement uniform.  Officers working in their cars on computers or together in coffee shops have been gunned down without warning.  Those who run toward the sound of gunfire to selflessly put themselves between harm and us deserve better than that.

If you agree, here are some things you can do:

Find some way to say thank you to a peace officer in your community.  “Thanks for your service, deputy/officer” will work just fine.

Tie a blue ribbon on your car aerial during National Police Week (May 9-15) to show your support and appreciation for the work law enforcement does.

Refuse to buy into the self-centered narcissism of our culture by living selflessly for Christ and others.  Your courageous contribution to the climate of our society can help change the culture, make our communities safer, and make the job of our law enforcement professionals easier.

John 15:13 Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends.

For more information check out the COPS website:

http://www.nationalcops.org/

A Call For A Biblical Church System

Dear Friends of Lakeview Community Church:

You are receiving this letter because you are now or have been a part of our fellowship.  As we move to within days of the Easter celebration, I want to let you know about some of the things we believe God would have us do in the coming days.

It has been my long-held belief that there are foundational changes that need to happen to the modern Church of Jesus Christ.  I will attempt to list a few of these things in the coming paragraphs.

At Lakeview we are far from perfect, and we have found the changes we have made have come as part of a journey that brings us to new territory at each bend in the road.  We also realize that there is an innumerable group of people who attend church meetings each week who love the Lord and want to serve Him.  Our emphasis is not the people, but the system–a self-perpetuating organizational structure of processes, doctrine and, of course, thought.

Here are (briefly) some of the things we will give our effort to change, in our own hearts and minds and in the Christian world around us.

Believers, alone and together, should be about building people, not organizations. In the United States, there are millions of members of the Lord’s Church and tens of thousands of qualified leaders.  Think of what could be accomplished if our attention was turned from building organizations and meetings to equipping people.

Christianity is not a meeting.  It is unfortunate that most churches believe that their meetings are the most vital spiritual time their attendees will have during the week.  Of greater shame is they believe that is the way Jesus wants it.  Churches even go so far as to teach their people to expect it.  Don’t we understand that Christianity is not a meeting, and that an emphasis like that diminishes the value of the everyday lives of believers?  Those days and hours lived in no one’s presence or accountability but that of the Lord.  Life is not lived in a meeting; Christ is glorified by my work-a-day life, if I purpose it so.

Attendance at a meeting is not a measure of God’s blessing. I’ve been to many church growth and pastors’ meetings that emphasized how to grow our meetings.  You would think this was a command of the Lord.  I can find no direct command or indirect encouragement in the New Testament to make our meetings bigger. Unfortunately, we have few if any qualitative measures of maturity, only quantitative measures based on attendance, conversion cards or offerings.  We don’t know how to measure success and maturity in life because we cannot count the lack of failure.  Children who do not stray and marriages that stay together have no place on the tally sheet.  Our emphasis on numbers has caused us to be carnal in our outlook and evaluation.

There is no biblical basis for modern children’s and youth ministry.  Study after study tells us that parents are the most influential people in their children’s lives; yet when we get to church, we separate them.  We tell parents our children’s workers are trained to minister to their children, implying it takes some special enablement to tell them about Jesus.  Our constant repetition of that refrain minimizes the importance of parents (to whom God gave the task) and makes it easier for parents who now feel inadequate to relinquish their kids to a youth pastor.  Why not keep families together?  A place can be provided for the occasional restless or screaming little one and families can worship and study together.  Kids can see their parents respond to the Word of God and parents can see the same for their kids.  Why have churches taught parents to abrogate their responsibility in this most important area?  I’ll write more later about the false premise of adolescence.

The gospel of self is not the Gospel of the New Testament. The true gospel tells the story of God’s amazing grace. It is the story of a Holy God who loves us and sends His Son to die in our place.  It is amazing because we are completely undeserving and have no value except that which God applies to us.  In this Bible Gospel, we must acknowledge our unworthiness and utter helplessness to better our situation in order to receive this gracious gift.  We bring nothing except our helpless and hopeless state; and we receive because of His grace, not our worth.

Modern Christianity, in an effort to make the story more palatable, has watered down or removed the part of the story about the unworthiness of humanity.  In telling only part of the story, the Church has produced followers who believe the Gospel is about them.  They are demanding of God, without basic humility and without an understanding of God.  They cannot grasp the concept of Christ’s Lordship, or God’s sovereignty. They believe God is there for them rather than their existing to honor and glorify Him.

I’m asking for your help.  My heart goes out to the untold multitude of believers who have been frustrated and hurt by the modern church system.  There are also millions who do not know Jesus and who cannot hear our message because the culture of our church system speaks louder than our words.  I hope that if you agree with any of the above, you will take some time in the next weeks to visit our web site.  We will be adding to these topics regularly.  Further, if you agree I ask you to join us, not with your attendance or money, but with your heart and mind and prayers.

May the Lord bless you with a Christ-filled Easter.

Respectfully,

Pastor Jess

Rev. Jess Jessup

Pastor, LCC

Real, Practical Christianity